THE ANNOUNCEMENT BY the 43% UK state-owned Lloyds Banking Group last month that it was replacing existing so-called hybrid debt securities with a new form of regulator-prescribed debt called contingent capital has highlighted the task regulators face in aligning their own interests in reducing the sectors reliance on the lender of last resort with the fostering of a market-led solution that works for all.
The UKs Financial Services Authority became the first of the most important global bank regulators out of the blocks last month in proposing this new form of capital, which has the prime objective of allowing banks to self-medicate in times of distress, rather than requiring governments to inject new equity as a last resort. Contingent capital is a security that looks and acts like a bond. However, it converts into common equity when the issuing banks core tier 1 ratio falls below a specified level, in...